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It’s down to the top two!

Updated on: 07 June,2025 09:19 AM IST  |  Paris
Agencies |

World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka and second seed Coco Gauff will face off for their maiden French Open title today; American stresses on need to stay calm against in-form Belarusian

It’s down to the top two!

Aryna Sabalenka during her semi-final victory over Iga Swiatek in Paris on Thursday; (right) Coco Gauff returns to Lois Boisson during their last-four clash. mid-day imaging/Getty

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The biggest difference Coco Gauff sees between the player who lost her first Grand Slam final at the 2022 French Open at age 18, and the one who will play for the trophy again on Saturday at 21, this time against No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka, is the way she views the importance of the occasion.

Gauff was nervous in 2022


Three years ago at Roland Garros, Gauff was making her debut on that sort of stage and with that sort of prize at stake. It felt like the outcome meant absolutely everything, a burden that was a lot at the time and made her nervous.



Now, the No. 2-ranked Gauff says, she understands “how miniscule” the result Saturday is in the scheme of things.

“Everybody is dealing with way bigger things in life than losing a final,” the American said after beating 361st-ranked French wild-card entry Lois Boisson 6-1, 6-2 in the semi-finals Thursday.

“I’m sure there are hundreds of players that would kill to win or lose a final, so just knowing that [makes] me realize how lucky and privileged I am to be in this position,” Gauff said. “At first, I thought it would be the end of the world if I lost, and, you know, the sun still rose the next day. Regardless of the result, the sun will still rise.”

Here’s another key difference: The Gauff of today is a Grand Slam champion. She won the 2023 US Open; her opponent in that final just so happened to be Sabalenka.

“I just remember kind of feeling,” Gauff said, “like I was holding my breath to the match point.” Their head-to-head series is tied 5-5 entering the first No. 1 vs. No. 2 match-up in a French Open women’s final since Serena Williams beat Maria Sharapova in 2023.

Sabalenka beat Gauff in their most recent meeting, which came at the Madrid Open in May on the type of red clay used at Roland Garros. So Gauff is well aware of Sabalenka’s many talents, which were on full display during a 7-6 (1), 4-6, 6-0 semi-final victory over three-time defending champion Iga Swiatek. 

‘Aryna’s a fighter’

“She can come up with some big shots and big winners pretty much at all areas of the court,” Gauff said about the 27-year-old from Belarus. “Aryna’s a fighter, as well. She’s going to stay in the match regardless of the scoreline. I’ll just give it my best shot and try to be as calm and relaxed as possible,” Gauff added
After getting pushed to a third set by Swiatek, who had won 26 matches in a row at the French Open, Sabalenka was pretty much perfect down the stretch.

Even Sabalenka called the lopsided nature of that last set “shocking for me.”

Three 
No. of Grand Slam titles won by Aryna Sabalenka. All have come on hard courts — two Australian Open titles and one US Open crown

One
No. of Grand Slam titles won by Coco Gauff. It came by beating Aryna Sabalenka 
at the 2023 US Open

5-5
It’s all square in head-to-heads between Gauff and Sabalenka. They are tied 1-1 at Grand Slams and on clay courts too

2013
The last time a French Open final was contested between a World 
No. 1 and 2 — USA’s Serena Williams vs Russian Maria Sharapova

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